| Along
with ABCs, some learn Chinese
Article from The Boston
Globe
By Tracy Jan, Globe Staff | June 8, 2005
BROOKLINE MA -- All first-graders at the Driscoll
School can write numbers 1 through 10, name the colors,
and talk about plants and the solar system -- in Mandarin
Chinese. They began studying Chinese in kindergarten.
Chinese, a language most school systems don't offer
until high school, if at all, is becoming popular in
elementary classrooms around Greater Boston, as well
as elsewhere in the nation. Spanish still reigns as
the most popular language, but parents and lawmakers
hope that Chinese soon will become commonly taught.
School systems are starting the lessons with the youngest
students in hope they learn the language well enough
to compete in the new world economy, as China becomes
an economic and political superpower.
During the last two to five years, schools in Sharon
and Brookline have started elementary Chinese programs.
Milton and Needham school systems offer Chinese before
or after school. Belmont began offering Chinese instruction
to all of its fifth-graders this year. The Carlisle
school system is considering adding a pilot program
in Chinese for elementary students this fall, and Amherst
wants to add Chinese instruction for kindergartners
in fall 2006.
The Asia Society in New York City estimates that about
24,000 of the 49.5 million elementary and high school
students in the United States are studying Chinese,
even though nearly 1.3 billion people speak Chinese
in the world; the smallest proportion of US students
studying the language are in elementary school. By
comparison, more than 1 million students study French,
a language spoken by 80 million people worldwide.
''China just is going to be a future power," said
Marie Doyle, Carlisle superintendent. ''It behooves
us to make sure the children are really studying the
culture, the customs, and the language. The more they
know, the more successful they will be in the business
world."
Educators say early exposure to Chinese is critical.
Chinese takes nearly three times as long as Spanish
to master, according to the Foreign Service Institute,
which trains American diplomats for the State Department.
It takes 1,300 hours to achieve proficiency in speaking
Chinese, while people need 480 hours to become proficient
in French and Spanish.
''I want to keep learning, learning, learning and
then go to China," said the 6-year-old. ''I teach
my mom every word I really know." Her classmate
Ibi Agba, who speaks a Nigerian dialect at home, said
Chinese has been hard to learn because some of the
sentences are too long to remember. But the 6-year-old
said he likes writing pinyin, the English pronunciations
of Chinese words, and impressing his parents.
Last week, first-graders wrote sentences describing
potted plants on their desks, using Chinese words for
little, tall, leaf, and green, as their teacher doled
out high fives. By the time the students are in eighth
grade, they should know how to read and write short
essays using simplified Chinese characters and to hold
conversations in Chinese, said Huajing Maske, director
of the Driscoll School's Chinese program. Driscoll
parent Christopher Koch said he's grateful that his
second-grade daughter has the opportunity to learn
Chinese at such a young age. ''I just see how important
this is going to be for the economic future of our
kids," Koch said. ''It's great to feel we're on
the leading edge of that."
The Boston and Cambridge school systems have offered
Chinese in elementary schools for about a decade. In
Amherst and Needham, the presence of many adopted children
from China is playing a role in introducing Chinese
to students. Needham began the instruction on a fee
basis this year, while Amherst wants to start offering
Chinese to kindergartners in one school in fall 2006.
School officials say that starting and maintaining
Chinese-language programs in elementary schools is
a challenge. Textbooks are scarce, as are qualified
teachers. Paying for the programs is also tough when
some school systems are reducing foreign language offerings.
Many area Chinese programs started with grant money,
on the idea that the school system and municipality
would eventually pick up the tab. Brookline used to
offer Chinese in two other elementary schools, but
their grants expired last year. The school system hopes
the town will pay for additional Chinese programs,
along with Spanish and Japanese, by fall 2006.
Financial help could come soon from the federal government,
which wants to see Chinese language instruction grow.
Two weeks ago, Senators Joseph I. Lieberman, a Connecticut
Democrat, and Lamar Alexander, a Tennessee Republican,
introduced a bill that would provide $1.3 billion in
federal money over five years to pay for Chinese language
programs in American schools, as well as cultural exchanges
to improve US-China relations.
Another push for Chinese, educators say, is coming
from the College Board's decision to add a Mandarin
Chinese Advanced Placement program in fall 2006. The
board administers the college-level AP tests. ''The
fact that Chinese is now under the AP umbrella, that
gives it an importance that other, less commonly taught
languages might not have," said Gracie Burke,
world languages director in Milton, which began its
Chinese program two years ago. If funding were not
an issue, she would also like to add Arabic, because
of heightened awareness of the need for Arabic interpreters,
Burke said.
''At a time of national crisis we sort of go, 'Oh,
my goodness' and realize languages are important at
that particular moment," she said. ''But the crisis
goes away, and we sort of go back to the way we were,
monolingual."
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